I say I'm an academic: a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins. And I write.
It's always been my dream to do a dance scene with Anthony Hopkins.
Hopkins: [reading his poem] "The cat sat on the mat" John Keating: Congratulations, Mr. Hopkins. You have the first poem to ever have a negative score on the Pritchard scale.
Working with Anthony Hopkins every day is a blessing.
life ain't supposed to be nothing, 'cept maybe tough
The Earth does not belong to us: we belong to the Earth.
Ethel: Where are you going? Mr. Hopkins: Fishing. Ethel: At this time of night? You're mad. Mr. Hopkins: What's the difference? There's no fish, day or night.
I just finished Meet Joe Black with Hopkins.
Try to leave the Earth a better place than when you arrived.
Mr Tony Hopkins says he's willing to do it if he likes the script.
I think the first little jolt I got was reading Gerard Manley Hopkins - I liked other poems... but Hopkins was kind of electric for me - he changed the rules with speech, and the whole intensity of the language was there and so on.
My biggest fantasy love affair was with Dustin Hoffman. It's so bizarre. Also Anthony Hopkins.
What would the world be, once bereft Of wet and of wildness? Let them be left, O let them be left, wildness and wet; Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.
All our environmental problems become easier to solve with fewer people and harder - and ultimately impossible to solve - with ever more people.
I wanted to be Anthony Hopkins and ended up being neither a film star nor having a career on the stage.
The ideal college is Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a student on the other.
I'd love to work with Sir Anthony Hopkins, but if that doesn't happen, I'd sneak on to a film set and watch him at work. He is a compelling actor.
My heroes are Robert Duvall, Forest Whitaker, Ed Harris, Tommy Lee Jones, Anthony Hopkins and Sean Penn.
I still have not given up the idea of becoming a journalist, but at 17 I decided to follow my heart and stay in Los Angeles with my girlfriend as opposed to going to Johns Hopkins.
Johns Hopkins introduced me to two defining events in my life: commitment to biomedical research and meeting my future wife, Mary.
The Department of Cell Biology at Johns Hopkins was founded and directed by Tom Pollard, an engaging young scientist with remarkable energy and enthusiasm.